Wesley Gibson v. Chubb National Insurance Company
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
Date FiledJuly 13, 2026
Docket25-1121
JudgeSykes
StatusPublished
📰 News Coverage: Read the LAWS.com news report on this case
Full Opinion
In the
United States Court of Appeals
for the Seventh Circuit
____________________
No. 25-1121
WESLEY J. GIBSON,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CHUBB NATIONAL INSURANCE COMPANY,
Defendant-Appellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
No. 20-cv-1069 — Elaine E. Bucklo, Judge.
____________________
ARGUED OCTOBER 29, 2025 — DECIDED JULY 13, 2026
____________________
Before SYKES, ST. EVE, and MALDONADO, Circuit Judges.
SYKES, Circuit Judge. In October 2019 a freak lightning
strike sparked a devastating fire at Pine Manor, Wesley
Gibson’s 24,000-square-foot countryside mansion in southern
Illinois. The fire caused a constructive total loss of the man-
sion and its contents. Gibson promptly filed a claim with
Chubb National Insurance Company, his insurer.
2 No. 25-1121
Gibson purchased Pine Manor almost 30 years ago as a
private vacation home for his family. Over time he renovated
it and filled its rooms with expensive furniture, antiques, and
artwork from all over the world. He also transformed the
property into a commercial lodging and events venue, pur-
chasing and refurbishing neighboring homes, and adding
amenities like a pool and conference center to form what the
estate’s website calls a “luxury country inn and resort.”
Gibson and his family periodically stayed at Pine Manor after
the change in its use—typically for about 70 days each year,
mostly over weekends and holidays. But the estate is primar-
ily a rental facility, and Gibson reported it on his tax returns
as a business property with 365 days of commercial use.
Although Pine Manor’s use changed over time, Gibson
continued to insure the mansion under a homeowner’s policy
rather than upgrade to commercial property insurance. That
proved to be a costly decision. At the time of the fire, the
Chubb policy provided $8.75 million in coverage for the man-
sion under the “Deluxe House” section and $3.5 million for its
contents under the “Deluxe Contents” section. But the con-
tents section excluded coverage for losses to property used to
conduct the insured’s business, except “as provided under
Extra Coverages.” And the “Extra Coverages” section capped
coverage for losses to business property at $25,000.
Chubb paid the full $8.75 million policy limit for the loss
of the mansion itself; unlike the contents coverage, the Deluxe
House coverage did not contain a business-property exclu-
sion. But the insurer denied Gibson’s $3.5 million claim for
the loss of the mansion’s contents, explaining that because he
operated the property as a commercial lodging and events
venue, the business-property exclusion in the contents cover-
No. 25-1121 3
age applied. Chubb accordingly paid only the $25,000 policy
sublimit for loss of property used to conduct the insured’s
business.
Gibson sued Chubb for breach of contract, seeking the full
$3.5 million in contents coverage; he also asserted claims un-
der state insurance and consumer-fraud statutes. On cross-
motions for summary judgment, the district judge held that
Chubb had properly classified most (but not all) of Pine
Manor’s contents as business property, so she granted partial
summary judgment for the insurer. The parties settled the few
issues that remained, and the judge entered final judgment.
Gibson appealed, challenging the partial summary judgment
against him.
We affirm. Gibson operated Pine Manor as an upscale
lodging and events facility and used nearly all the mansion’s
contents to conduct that business. The contents coverage in
the Chubb policy promised to pay no more than $25,000 for
losses to property used to conduct the insured’s business.
Chubb paid that amount in full, so the judge properly entered
judgment for the insurer.
I. Background
Gibson owns and manages Gibson Consulting Group, a
Chicago-based logistics consulting firm. In the late 1990s, he
purchased Pine Manor, a 24,000-square-foot mansion on a pri-
vate lake in the foothills of the Shawnee National Forest on
the outskirts of Carbondale, Illinois. Intending to use the man-
sion as a vacation home for his family, Gibson refurbished it
and filled it with personal belongings: family heirlooms,
furniture and artwork from a different home he had recently
sold, and an oriental rug that he had given his wife to cele-
brate their first wedding anniversary.
4 No. 25-1121
To supplement the furnishings he already owned, he cu-
rated a lavish collection of antiques, artifacts, and fine art, in-
cluding an Italian rococo-style mirror and windows from the
original Lloyd’s of London building. Over time, Gibson spent
millions of dollars renovating, furnishing, and decorating
Pine Manor.
He also gradually expanded the Pine Manor estate, trans-
forming it from a stand-alone family mansion into a sprawl-
ing commercial lodging and events complex. He built confer-
ence facilities that could accommodate large groups and pur-
chased neighboring homes—some modest, others grandi-
ose—to house additional guests. He also dotted the property
with amenities, including a pool, carriage house, boat dock,
and sports courts. The estate eventually grew to include al-
most a dozen structures occupying over 100 wooded acres.
With the Pine Manor compound’s growing size came a
shift in the mansion’s use. Whereas Gibson and his family
were once the mansion’s only visitors, the estate soon began
to welcome paying guests. Between 2016 and 2019, Gibson’s
consulting firm paid a $70,000 monthly retainer to use Pine
Manor for its corporate training retreats; each year, the estate
hosted up to 20 weeks of client training. And on weekends
Pine Manor was a popular wedding venue: Starting in about
2010, at least six and sometimes as many as sixteen weddings
were celebrated at Pine Manor every year.
Gibson also made the Pine Manor properties available for
short-term vacation stays. To attract guests, Gibson hired a
marketing firm to design social-media pages and a website for
the estate. Describing Pine Manor as a “luxury country inn
and resort,” the website boasted of its proximity to Southern
Illinois University and its ability to accommodate large gath-
No. 25-1121 5
erings like family reunions, retirement celebrations, and
birthday parties. At the time of the fire, the website also high-
lighted Gibson’s impressive collection of antiques, promising
prospective guests a “backdrop of fine art and collections
from around the world.” All told, in both 2017 and 2018,
Gibson earned $1 million in lodging revenue from hosting
guests at Pine Manor, and his personal tax returns consist-
ently reported 365 “fair rental days” for the estate.
Many of Pine Manor’s visitors stayed in the original man-
sion, enjoying unfettered access to its movie room, pub room,
game room, dining spaces, and commercial and country
kitchens. Guests also had access to the collectibles and heir-
looms that filled these rooms. In fact, even after Pine Manor
opened its doors to paying guests, Gibson continued to dis-
play his family heirlooms and antiques throughout the man-
sion because, in his words, it was “way cheaper than a storage
unit” and “fun for people to see and use” them.
Indeed, only a few spaces were off-limits to guests: a wine
cellar, a gun safe, and two locked closets in the master bed-
room. In these closets Gibson and his wife stored clothing,
jewelry, and other personal items they used when visiting
Pine Manor; the family didn’t relinquish all personal use of
the mansion after it opened to the public for corporate, group,
or individual stays. Rather, they continued to spend approxi-
mately 70 nights a year at Pine Manor, primarily over holi-
days and weekends. And in 2019 Gibson spent seven weeks
at the mansion while recuperating from an illness.
Given the size of the estate and the range of events it
hosted, Gibson obtained a bed and breakfast license from the
City of Carbondale, liquor licenses from both the city and the
state, and authorization from the state to use Pine Manor for
6 No. 25-1121
commercial purposes. He also hired an on-site property man-
ager whose responsibilities include maintaining the estate, re-
sponding to guest inquiries, and coordinating with outside
vendors. The estate also employs approximately ten other
full-time employees who handle the housekeeping and land-
scaping duties.
In June 2017 an underwriter at Chubb, Pine Manor’s in-
surer, discovered that Gibson was no longer using the prop-
erty solely for personal use. She accordingly warned Gibson’s
insurance broker about the possibility of a “large gap in cov-
erage” based on exclusions in Gibson’s homeowner’s insur-
ance policy. She recommended that Gibson switch to a com-
mercial property-insurance policy. That didn’t happen.
Gibson instead renewed his “Masterpiece” personal home-
owner’s policy in both 2018 and 2019.
On October 22, 2019, lightning struck the Pine Manor
mansion and ignited a fire that swept through the house. The
mansion was unoccupied at the time, so no one was hurt. But
the entire house, as well as everything in it, was deemed a
total loss.
Gibson promptly filed a claim with Chubb under his
Masterpiece homeowner’s policy, which provided about
$8.75 million in “Deluxe House” coverage and $3.5 million in
“Deluxe Contents” coverage. The former covered the man-
sion itself, whereas the latter covered the personal property
inside it. After inspecting what was left of the mansion and
reviewing Pine Manor’s website, Chubb determined that
Gibson was entitled to the full $8.75 million coverage limit for
the loss of the mansion. But for the loss of everything else,
Chubb agreed to pay only $25,000.
No. 25-1121 7
The insurer’s explanation centered on a sublimit in the
Deluxe Contents portion of the policy for losses to “business
property.” The Deluxe Contents coverage generally protected
against “all risk of physical loss” to the mansion’s “con-
tents”—that is, Gibson’s and his family’s “personal prop-
erty.” That broad grant of coverage, however, carried an ex-
clusion for losses to “business property.” Under the heading
“Exclusions,” the contents section of the Chubb policy states:
“Business property. We do not cover any loss to business
property other than as provided under Extra Coverages.”
And the cross-referenced “Extra Coverages” section provided
only very limited protection for losses to business property:
Chubb promised to pay “up to $25,000 … for a covered loss
to business property.”
The Deluxe Contents section of the policy defines the term
“business property” as follows:
“Business property” means:
• furniture, supplies, equipment, inventory;
• books, records; and
• electronic data processing property,
used to conduct your business.
But drones and like devices are excluded: “‘Business prop-
erty’ does not include any drones or similar unmanned de-
vice, whether used in whole or in part in a business.” (This
provision may seem random now, but its role in Gibson’s ar-
gument will become clear later.) Finally, and importantly
here, the term “business” is defined very broadly as “any em-
ployment, trade, occupation, profession, or farm operation in-
cluding the raising or care of animals or any activity intended
to realize a benefit or financial gain engaged in on a full-time,
part-time[,] or occasional basis.”
8 No. 25-1121
Putting these pieces of the policy together, Chubb ex-
plained that because Gibson had been operating Pine Manor
as a “luxury bed and breakfast and event venue”—that is, a
business—its contents were subject to the business-property
exclusion and his recovery was limited to the $25,000 sublimit
in the “Business Property” provision in the “Extra Coverages”
section. Chubb also reminded Gibson that its underwriter had
previously flagged “significant gaps in liability” and that
Gibson had nonetheless “elected to maintain and renew” his
Masterpiece homeowner’s policy.
Gibson sued Chubb alleging claims for (1) breach of con-
tract; (2) “vexatious and unreasonable” conduct in violation
of § 155 of the Illinois Insurance Code, 215 ILL. COMP. STAT.
5/155; and (3) “unfair or deceptive acts or practices” in viola-
tion of § 2 of the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Busi-
ness Practices Act, 815 ILL. COMP. STAT. 505/2.
After extensive discovery, both parties moved for sum-
mary judgment. Synthesizing the relevant provisions of the
Masterpiece policy, the district judge concluded that the
$25,000 sublimit applied to any “property that is used,
whether partially or fully, to conduct the insured’s ‘busi-
ness.’” And it was clear, she explained, that Gibson operated
Pine Manor as a business: “In addition to weddings and other
events, Pine Manor hosted multiple weeks of client trainings
and seminars for Gibson Consulting each year, and Gibson
Consulting paid a monthly retainer for that privilege.”
Because Pine Manor’s contents were “overwhelmingly used”
to further this luxury lodging and events business, they qual-
ified as “business property” and thus were subject to the
policy’s $25,000 coverage limit.
No. 25-1121 9
The judge also concluded, however, that certain items of
property did not qualify as business property. As we’ve
noted, some areas of Pine Manor were not accessible to
guests—namely, two locked closets in the master bedroom, a
wine cellar, and a gun safe. Because guests could neither use
nor access these areas of the mansion, the judge held that the
property stored in these spaces was not used to further
Gibson’s luxury rental business. The judge thus carved out
this narrow portion of Gibson’s claim and allowed it to pro-
ceed. 1 Otherwise, she entered partial summary judgment for
Chubb on the contract claim.
The fate of the two statutory claims was tied to the contract
claim. The judge concluded that because Chubb had properly
interpreted and applied the insurance contract, its conduct
was neither “vexatious” nor “unreasonable” under § 155 of
the Illinois Insurance Code. For much the same reason, the
judge rejected Gibson’s claim that Chubb had violated § 2 of
the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act. Accordingly, the judge en-
tered summary judgment for Chubb on the statutory claims
too.
After two years of additional litigation, the parties settled
the few remaining issues, and the judge entered final judg-
ment. Gibson appealed, challenging the judge’s summary-
judgment ruling.
II. Discussion
Because this suit invokes the court’s diversity jurisdiction,
the law of the forum state—here, Illinois—governs these
1 The judge also denied summary judgment on a separate claim under the
Masterpiece policy’s “Valuable Articles” provision, but that claim has no
relevance here.
10 No. 25-1121
state-law claims. Under Illinois law a court’s “primary objec-
tive” in construing an insurance policy is to give effect to the
parties’ intent “as expressed in the policy language.” Acuity v.
M/I Homes of Chi., LLC, 234 N.E.3d 97, 105 (Ill. 2023). To that
end, the court gives the terms of the policy, unless otherwise
defined, “their plain, ordinary, and popular meaning.” Id.
(quotation omitted); see Mkt. St. Bancshares, Inc. v. Fed. Ins. Co.,
962 F.3d 947, 952 (7th Cir. 2020) (interpreting Illinois law ac-
cordingly). We review the summary-judgment order—
including the embedded contract-interpretation questions—
de novo. BB Syndication Servs., Inc. v. First Am. Title Ins. Co.,
780 F.3d 825, 829 (7th Cir. 2015).
A. Contract Claim
The district judge’s analysis of the contract claim was ex-
actly right—both her interpretation of the insurance policy
and the application of it to the facts of this case. Gibson’s
Masterpiece homeowner’s policy caps Chubb’s coverage ob-
ligation at $25,000 for losses to “business property,” defined
as all “furniture, supplies, equipment, inventory[,] books, rec-
ords[,] and electronic data processing property,” if these
items are “used to conduct [the insured’s] business.” 2 And the
2 For the first time at oral argument, Gibson’s counsel suggested that the
term “business property” might mean something different in the
“Exclusions” section of the policy than it does in the “Extra Coverages”
section. That argument is nowhere to be found in Gibson’s briefs, so it is
waived. Quality Oil, Inc. v. Kelley Partners, Inc., 657 F.3d 609, 614–15 (7th
Cir. 2011). Waiver aside, the argument is meritless: The business-property
exclusion forecloses coverage for “any loss to business property other than
as provided under Extra Coverages.” This express reference to the “Extra
Coverages” section of the policy incorporates the definition of “business
property” found there, so “business property” carries the same meaning
throughout the policy.
No. 25-1121 11
policy’s definition of “business” is capacious: “any employ-
ment, trade, occupation, profession, or farm operation includ-
ing the raising or care of animals or any activity intended to
realize a benefit or financial gain engaged in on a full-time,
part-time[,] or occasional basis.”
Combining and simplifying these unwieldy definitions,
the judge concluded that the term “business property” refers
to any “property that is used, whether partially or fully, to
conduct the insured’s ‘business.’” We agree.
Gibson contests this interpretation, arguing that the pol-
icy’s definition of “business property” refers only to (as he
puts it) “traditional business assets that are used exclusively
in the operation of a business.” His logic proceeds this way:
The definition of “business property” lists several categories
of property—e.g., equipment, inventory, books, records, and
electronic data-processing property—that are conventionally
associated with a commercial enterprise. And the other listed
categories that are not necessarily associated with a commer-
cial enterprise—e.g., supplies and furniture—must be con-
strued in harmony with the rest of the distinctly commercial
list. See Yates v. United States, 574 U.S. 528, 543 (2015) (“[T]he
principle of noscitur a sociis” instructs that “a word is known
by the company it keeps … .”). It thus follows, Gibson argues,
that “business property” refers only to quintessential office
furniture like desks and printer stands, not rococo-style mir-
rors and oriental rugs.
This argument ignores a defined term embedded within
this definition. As we’ve noted, the term “business” is defined
very broadly and extends well beyond commercial enter-
prises that operate in traditional office settings. By its terms,
the definition encompasses farming—obviously not an office-
12 No. 25-1121
based activity—and contains a sweeping catchall clause en-
compassing “any activity” aimed at financial gain, whether
engaged in on a full-time, part-time, or only occasional basis.
Nothing in this definition limits the term to commercial enter-
prises that operate from traditional offices. It follows that the
term “business property” is not limited to items found in tra-
ditional commercial office settings.
Gibson invokes the noscitur a sociis principle, which holds
that associated words in a list “should be assigned a permis-
sible meaning that makes them similar.” ANTONIN SCALIA &
BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF
LEGAL TEXTS 195 (2012). But this interpretive canon has force
only when the grouped items are cohesive; in other words,
when they have a “core of meaning” or at least share a “com-
mon feature.” Graham Cnty. Soil & Water Conservation Dist. v.
U.S. ex rel. Wilson, 559 U.S. 280, 288–89 & n.7 (2010); SCALIA &
GARNER, supra at 196. Indeed, it is this shared connotation that
contextually informs the meaning of ambiguous terms in the
grouping and ensures that their meaning is consistent with
that of “the company [they] keep[].’” Gustafson v. Alloyd Co.,
513 U.S. 561, 575 (1995).
Here, however, the categories of property listed in the def-
inition of “business property” are generic terms (e.g., sup-
plies, equipment, furniture) that lack a common quality. What
makes them cohesive, providing the context for their interpre-
tation, is the qualifier “used to conduct your business.” And
the definition of “business,” as we’ve noted, is not limited to
enterprises operated from traditional commercial offices. On
the contrary, it includes farming and “any activity” aimed at
achieving financial gain.
No. 25-1121 13
That brings us to Gibson’s next argument, which centers
on that phrase “used to conduct your business.” As a re-
minder, the policy’s definition of “business property” consists
of a list of several categories of property followed by the mod-
ifier “used to conduct your business.” Here it is again in full:
“Business property” means:
• furniture, supplies, equipment, inventory;
• books, records; and
• electronic data processing property,
used to conduct your business.
Gibson argues that the phrase “used to conduct your busi-
ness” modifies only the third item in the bullet-point list:
“electronic data processing property.” There are two reasons,
he says, to read the definition this way. The first is the place-
ment of “used to conduct your business.” Because this clause
appears at the end of the definition rather than at the start,
Gibson maintains that it modifies only the final term in the
list. His second reason focuses on the use of a comma after the
phrase “electronic data processing property.” The other cate-
gories of property, Gibson notes, are separated by semicolons,
so the phrase “used to conduct your business” shouldn’t be
read to modify them.
This argument doesn’t make sense as a structural matter;
nor does it favor the insured. If the qualifier—“used to con-
duct your business”—modifies only the last category in the
list (data processing equipment), then everything listed be-
fore it (furniture, supplies, equipment, and so on) is subject to
the $25,000 coverage cap regardless of how the insured uses
it—that is, whether or not the insured used it for a business
purpose. We doubt that any insured prefers that interpreta-
tion.
14 No. 25-1121
In any event, Gibson is wrong. The presence of the comma
after “electronic data processing property” confirms that
“used to conduct your business” modifies each of the preced-
ing clauses. Stepnowski v. Comm’r, 456 F.3d 320, 324 (3d Cir.
2006) (“[W]here there is a comma before a modifying phrase,
that phrase modifies all of the items in a series and not just the
immediately preceding item.”); see SCALIA & GARNER, supra
at 161–62. The placement of the phrase “used to conduct your
business” reinforces this interpretation: Because this clause is
listed on its own line and lacks an introductory bullet point,
it modifies each of the items that precede it. SCALIA & GARNER,
supra at 156 (“[M]aterial contained in unindented text relates
to all the … preceding indented subparts.”); cf. Martin v.
United States, 605 U.S. 395, 406–07 (2025).
Gibson also points to the adjacent drone provision, which
provides that the term “business property” does not include
drones and similar devices “whether used in whole or in part
in a business.” Because the general definition of “business
property” lacks a similar qualifier, Gibson argues that it must
refer only to property that is wholly used to conduct the in-
sured’s business; property that is used partially for personal
purposes doesn’t qualify.
If there’s an inference to be drawn from the policy’s drone
provision, it’s the opposite of the one Gibson asks us to draw.
The “in whole or in part” language in the drone carve-out is
necessary only if the general definition of “business property”
broadly covers property that is used either wholly or partially
for business purposes. If the general definition covers only
property that is used wholly for business purposes—as Gibson
argues—then the “in whole or in part” language would be un-
necessary. Accordingly, Gibson’s position that the $25,000
No. 25-1121 15
sublimit applies only to property used entirely for business
purposes finds no support in the policy language. 3
Finally, Gibson invokes two general principles that govern
the interpretation of insurance policies: (1) the court must con-
strue an insurance policy “as a whole, giving effect to every
provision, if possible,” Zurich Am. Ins. Co. v. Infrastructure
Eng’g, Inc., 248 N.E.3d 1072, 1081 (Ill. 2024) (quotation omit-
ted); and (2) insurance provisions that “limit or exclude cov-
erage” must be “interpreted liberally in favor of the insured
and against the insurer,” Am. States Ins. Co. v. Koloms,
687 N.E.2d 72, 75 (Ill. 1997). These general principles do not
help Gibson’s case. It is his interpretation—not Chubb’s—that
fails to give effect to the policy as a whole. Gibson’s reading
excises “farming” from the definition of “business” and fails
to give full effect to the phrase “used to conduct your busi-
ness” in the definition of “business property.”
And the liberal-construction rule has no application here:
That rule comes into play only when an insurance policy is
ambiguous. Rich v. Principal Life Ins. Co., 875 N.E.2d 1082, 1090
(Ill. 2007). This policy is not, and we “will not strain to find an
ambiguity where none exists.” Id. Gibson does exactly that.
Insisting that the policy is ambiguous, he highlights the
breadth of the general coverage grant in the Deluxe Contents
section of the policy, which protects his (and his family’s) per-
sonal property “against all risk of physical loss … anywhere
in the world.” That broad promise, he says, is impossible to
3 Chubb does not argue, and we do not suggest, that any business use
(even de minimis use) always transforms personal property into business
property. This case doesn’t require us to grapple with the margins or draw
lines; Pine Manor’s contents were used overwhelmingly for business pur-
poses.
16 No. 25-1121
reconcile with an interpretation of “business property” that
sweeps in anything used only partially for business purposes.
He also points to his $48,000 annual premium—a ridiculous
sum, he asserts, if it turns out that the policy covers next to
none of Pine Manor’s contents.
The short response is that broad coverage grants in insur-
ance policies usually come with specific exclusions and limi-
tations. And the business-property exclusion in this policy is
clear, as is the business-property sublimit in the Extra Cover-
ages section. Together, they cap Chubb’s liability for losses to
business property at $25,000. Gibson’s annual premium,
though costly, can’t overcome these unambiguous provisions.
Galarza v. Direct Auto Ins. Co., 234 N.E.3d 75, 82 (Ill. 2023) (“If
the insurance policy terms are clear and unambiguous, they
must be enforced as written, unless doing so would violate
public policy.” (quotation omitted)).
That brings us to the application of the business-property
sublimit to the facts of this case. The judge concluded that
Gibson operated Pine Manor as a luxury lodging and events
business and that its furnishings were “overwhelmingly
used” to further that business. Gibson argues that the judge
focused too heavily on his use of Pine Manor rather than its
contents. Not exactly. To be sure, the judge began her analysis
by examining whether Gibson operated Pine Manor as a busi-
ness. But necessarily so: To determine how Gibson used Pine
Manor’s contents—and more specifically, whether he used
them for business purposes—the judge first had to decide
how Gibson used Pine Manor. Because Gibson’s use of Pine
Manor was inextricably bound up with his use of the property
inside it, the judge appropriately considered the former to in-
form the latter.
No. 25-1121 17
Besides, after concluding that Gibson operated Pine
Manor as a luxury lodging and events business, the judge
went on to examine whether Gibson used Pine Manor’s con-
tents to further his business. He did—and overwhelmingly so.
After all, décor and furnishings are the “furniture,” “sup-
plies,” and “equipment” of any lodging or rental business.
Pine Manor was no exception: Its website promised guests a
“backdrop of fine art and artifacts from around the world.”
And Gibson acknowledged that he kept his family heirlooms
at Pine Manor because it was “fun for people to see and use”
them.
And they did: Guests had unfettered access to all but a few
spaces in the mansion, and they freely used its furnishings
and enjoyed its art and artifacts. In short, Pine Manor’s fur-
nishings, artwork, and decorations both enticed prospective
guests to visit the property and contributed to their experi-
ence once there, so the judge correctly held that Gibson used
the contents of the mansion to conduct his business.
The judge carved out the few personal areas that Gibson
kept under lock and key—the wine cellar, gun safe, and
locked closets in the master bedroom—holding that the con-
tents of these spaces did not qualify as business property. She
was right to draw that line: Because these items were not ac-
cessible to guests, they could not have contributed to the guest
experience and thus were not used to conduct Gibson’s busi-
ness.
Gibson urges us to draw a different line—one that ex-
cludes all the furniture and decorations he purchased himself
from the definition of “business property.” As he notes, he
purchased many of Pine Manor’s furnishings long before the
estate started to host paying guests. And even then, he and his
18 No. 25-1121
family continued to spend long weekends and holidays at
Pine Manor, staying approximately 70 nights each year.
But the policy’s definition of “business property” turns on
how Pine Manor’s contents were used; it doesn’t matter
whose bank account financed their purchase. And while it’s
true that Gibson and his family were once the only people
who enjoyed Pine Manor’s furnishings, by 2019 (when the
governing policy was in effect and the loss occurred) those
furnishings were overwhelmingly used for business pur-
poses. That resolves this case.
Finally, Gibson accuses the judge of assuming the role of
factfinder and accepting Chubb’s version of the facts over his.
But Gibson hasn’t identified any evidence that he thinks the
judge overlooked, misconstrued, or otherwise mishandled.
He instead “points to a proverbial haystack and asks us to
find his needle.” Boss v. Castro, 816 F.3d 910, 914 (7th Cir.
2016). We decline to do so.
B. Statutory Claims
The statutory claims are nonstarters, so we can be brief.
Section 155 of the Illinois Insurance Code entitles an insured
to up to $60,000 in damages and reasonable attorney fees if an
insurer takes “vexatious and unreasonable” action in resolv-
ing an insurance claim. 215 ILL. COMP. STAT. 5/155; see Cramer
v. Ins. Exch. Agency, 675 N.E.2d 897, 900 (Ill. 1996) (describing
§ 155 as “an extracontractual remedy to policy-holders whose
insurer’s refusal to recognize liability and pay a claim under
a policy is vexatious and unreasonable”). Gibson claims that
Chubb violated § 155 twice over: first by formulating a decep-
tive scheme to evade coverage and second by conducting a
“sham” investigation into his contents claim.
No. 25-1121 19
Gibson’s first contention is borderline frivolous. “If there
is a bona fide dispute regarding coverage—meaning a dispute
that is ‘[r]eal, genuine, and not feigned’—statutory sanctions
[under § 155] are inappropriate.” Med. Protective Co. v. Kim,
507 F.3d 1076, 1087 (7th Cir. 2007) (first alteration in original)
(quoting McGee v. State Farm Fire & Cas. Co., 734 N.E.2d 144,
153 (Ill. App. Ct. 2000)). Here, Chubb’s coverage dispute was
not just “genuine”; it was justified. And “[i]t is neither vexa-
tious nor unreasonable … to deny coverage based on a posi-
tion that prevails.” PQ Corp. v. Lexington Ins. Co., 860 F.3d
1026, 1038 (7th Cir. 2017). Just so here.
Moving to Gibson’s second contention, it too is meritless.
Chubb conducted a reasonable investigation into Gibson’s
claimed loss. A claims representative and insurance adjuster
visited Pine Manor shortly after the fire, and the insurer later
examined Pine Manor’s online presence. Gibson argues that
Chubb should have investigated each item that was de-
stroyed. But as best we can tell, a more detailed item-by-item
investigation likely would have been an exercise in futility.
Indeed, Gibson hasn’t identified a single item that Chubb im-
properly classified as “business property” (as that term is
properly understood). 4 So his complaint about the thorough-
ness of Chubb’s investigation rings hollow.
Gibson’s consumer-fraud claim fails for similar reasons.
Section 2 of the Illinois Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Busi-
ness Practices Act prohibits “deception[,] fraud, false pre-
tense, false promise, [or] misrepresentation,” among other
4 Gibson does not argue, so we do not consider, whether any of Pine
Manor’s contents do not qualify as “business property” because they fall
outside the discrete categories of property (furniture, supplies, etc.) that
comprise the definition of that term.
20 No. 25-1121
things, ”in the conduct of any trade or commerce.” 815 ILL.
COMP. STAT. 505/2. Gibson contends that Chubb sold him a
policy that covered Pine Manor’s contents and then fraudu-
lently misclassified those contents as “business property” to
avoid liability.
That’s plainly not the case. Chubb interpreted the Master-
piece policy as written and justifiably concluded that Gibson
was entitled to no more than the $25,000 sublimit for the loss
of Pine Manor’s furnishings. Because that coverage determi-
nation follows from the policy’s plain terms, it was not decep-
tive. 5
In sum, the judge properly entered summary judgment for
Chubb on Gibson’s claims for breach of contract and for vio-
lation of the Illinois Insurance Code and Consumer Fraud Act.
The judgment is accordingly
AFFIRMED.
5 For this reason, we need not consider Chubb’s alternative argument that
§ 155 of the Illinois Insurance Code preempts Gibson’s claim under § 2 of
the Illinois Consumer Fraud Act. See, e.g., Cook ex rel. Cook v. AAA Life Ins.
Co., 13 N.E.3d 20, 32 (Ill. App. Ct. 2014); Young v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
812 N.E.2d 741, 757 (Ill. App. Ct. 2004).